Rights, Relationality, and Membership: Rethinking the Making and Meaning of Citizenship |
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Authors: | Margaret R. Somers |
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Affiliation: | Margaret R. Somers;is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Michigan. Direct all correspondence to Margaret R. Somers, Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. |
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Abstract: | The republication after 40 years of T. H. Marshall's Citizenship and Social Class signifies a revived interest in sociolegal historical approaches to citizenship rights. For decades students have been guided by Marshall's classic treatise. But can Marshall's argument for the causal power of the “transition from feudalism to capitalism” continue to provide an adequate grounding for sociolegal approaches to citizenship and rights formation? Building on Marshall's path-breaking expansion of the concept of citizenship, I use institutional analysis and causal narrativity to present an alternative explanation. I argue that modem citizenship rights me a contingent outcome of the convergence of England's medieval legal revolutions with its regionally varied local legal and political cultures, not of the emergence of capitalist markets. |
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